Rahim está en la cárcel por una deuda que no pudo pagar. Durante un permiso de dos días, intenta convencer a su acreedor de que retire su demanda para no pagar parte de la suma. Pero las cos... Leer todoRahim está en la cárcel por una deuda que no pudo pagar. Durante un permiso de dos días, intenta convencer a su acreedor de que retire su demanda para no pagar parte de la suma. Pero las cosas no salen según lo previsto.Rahim está en la cárcel por una deuda que no pudo pagar. Durante un permiso de dos días, intenta convencer a su acreedor de que retire su demanda para no pagar parte de la suma. Pero las cosas no salen según lo previsto.
- Premios
- 18 premios ganados y 42 nominaciones en total
- Mrs. Radmehr
- (as Fereshteh Sadrorafaei)
- The Taxi Driver
- (as Ali Hasannejad Ranjbar)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Couple of comments: this is the latest from Iranian writer-director Asghar Farhadi, who has won Oscars for both 2011's "A Separation" and 2016's "The Salesman". Here once again Farhadi takes a look at a slice of life, where thing don't evolve as expected. On its face, the movie, very much like Farhadi's prior films, is deceitfully simple but in fact it examine many different aspects: a divorced man with a young son who stutters; the accumulative effects of so-called white lies; the peer pressure to conform in a conservative society. In the end, "A Hero" is another complex, nuanced morality play from Asghar Farhadi that, like an onion, reveals more with each layer as the movie goes by. The no-names cast is fantastic from start to finish. Filmed in the city of Shiraz (in southwest Iran), the film also offers a glimpse of what daily life in Iran looks like today (guess what: they are people just like us, many struggling to simply make ends meet).
"A Hero" premiered at last year's Cannes Film Festival to immediate critical acclaim (and winning one of the festival's major prizes). After a limited US theatrical release, the movie moved to Amazon Prime this weekend, where I caught it. If you are in the mood for another top-notch foreign morality play that is is as universal as it is spellbinding, I'd readily suggest you check this out, be it on Amazon Prime, Amazon Instant Video, or eventually on DVD/Blu-ray, and draw your own conclusion.
Amir Jadidi caries the movie. He wrestles with a moral dilemma and tries to do the right thing but circumstances do not favor him. He beautifully portrays the character's mild mannerisms and shows his anger due to festering frustrations and flare ups. Supporting cast has done a great job. Overall a decent movie which feels REAL and offers the viewer something new.
In this story, the snowball is the social media leading to defaming a good deed from a humble hero down the hill. Amazing storyline! Many audiences gave this movie low rating as the ending didn't satisfy their expectations. The fact is, we are constructing the end ahead of the story and get disappointed if we are seeing it the same.
As with his previous movies "A Separation" and "The Salesman," Farhadi presents us with an ambiguous situation and then sits back and observes what happens as a varied cast of characters try to navigate it. There are no good guys or bad guys, and there's no clear right or wrong. Some people do good things for the wrong reasons. Some people do bad, or at least hurtful, things for a good reason. Many characters fall into both categories. I love Farhadi's films because they don't editorialize and they acknowledge that the world we live in is messy and complicated and that nothing, not ideas or people or beliefs, can fall into the tidy buckets that our social media world wants them to.
Grade: A.
Here Farhadi decides to go for seemingly a more rewarding path regarding the script. He chooses to construct a long pattern of conflicts, hoping to keep the audience constantly interested. But Asghar goes overboard with it. It's like someone dared him to create the twistiest story he could come up with, and voila, this is the result. But this amount of plot-heavy nature of the screenplay didn't play as Farhadi was hoping. The film gets tiresome; too convoluted - not that I wasn't able to keep up with the story because Farhadi does an incredible job constructing it meticulously, but it lacks that spark that, as I said, made Farhadi's other films such masterpieces.
But my problem with the script is from a story standpoint only (that later would cause some plot holes with the character development of the main protagonist, which I can easily overlook - minor issue). As for the dialogue, here we get to enjoy some of the best character interactions Farhadi has ever created. And the actors deliver, at worst, grounded performances. I loved the performance of the actor playing the protagonist. I appreciate non-verbal acting, and Amir Jadidi shines in those moments here. His face is naturally compelling. He says so much with a sole glare - terrific performance!
As all Farhadi's movies, 'A Hero' is a film told with an enormous grace; a nuanced portrait of domestic life that's so far-reaching as it deals with thematics that are true to life in any culture and society. Again, the film is not up to mark with the best's of Farhadi. The numerous twist and turns seem to pile up and can become exhausting, plus the film feels longer than its running time due to its gradual pacing. But the simple approach, the assured direction, and outstanding performances make this one of the finest portrays of intricate human drama.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaWas inspired by the true story of Mohammad Reza Shokri, a man who returned a bag of cash he found while on a leave from a debtors' prison in Shiraz.
- Citas
Salehi: What's up?
Rahim Soltani: I don't want this to be shared.
Salehi: Believe me, when he was speaking, I nearly cried. Whoever sees it will be overwhelmed.
Rahim Soltani: I don't want my son to be seen like that.
Salehi: It's to your advantage and his. People will be on your side. Even that woman may see it and call you.
Rahim Soltani: No, delete it.
Salehi: Think a bit... The kid said nothing bad.
Rahim Soltani: I don't want...
Salehi: You think it's only about what you want? The reputation of all of us is at stake.
Rahim Soltani: You want it back through my son's stutter?
- Bandas sonorasBe Raghsa
Performed by Mohsen Chavoshi
Selecciones populares
- How long is A Hero?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- A Hero
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 2,916,932
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 7 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1